Wannacry

Lauri is very skilled with computers. Those skills could be put to better use, and that is what he wants to do – he seems very keen on using his skills for the good.

He helped by coordinating efforts to stop Wannacry attacks that hit the health service, which was a very big thing. He was helping to coordinate the volunteers to get people working to analyse the code.

He has started a social collective, called Bogaty Hack, to work with other experts to improve security, and he could do a lot more if he was given the opportunity.

With all the troubles Lauri had at university, he thought he was not good for society, but now he knows that he is good. It would be such a waste to let all that go and put him in a US prison for life.

It does make me wonder why he has been treated differently – the US were happy to let previous hacking cases be tried in the UK.

Political aspect to Lauri’s trial

I don’t know if there is a political aspect to it. Lauri is quite outspoken about his distaste for the America government, and the whole protest movement he is alleged to have been involved in is quite political.

Lauri has always been really intelligent. When we were growing up, he figured things out really quickly. He just knew how things worked. We had an MSX home computer and he figured how to write little programs on it, and taught me how to do it, and we would write our own computer games.

He can be quite idiotic in some ways, not having the sort of common sense that people normally have. I suppose it has something to do with Asperger’s.

If something is logical for him, and is the right way of doing things, he does not think about how other people would view it.

He knows that he is smart and he does not see that point of hiding that. He is not so patient with people if they don’t see things his way or don’t understand him. That can make him quite annoying, but once you get past that, he is a good person and very ethical.

“I was completely shocked when the judge said he should be extradited. Everyone in the public gallery was aghast. It was so unexpected.”

Natasha Lovex

I came to England from Finland to hear the verdict of the first trial, and I was completely shocked when the judge said he should be extradited. Everyone in the public gallery was aghast. It was so unexpected.

Lauri could not really comprehend the verdict went the way it did, because all the evidence was there and it was ignored. It wasn’t logical for him.

His usual way of dealing with things is to make jokes and ignore how serious the situation is.

He absolutely would not be able to cope with the conditions in US prisons. He would not cope at all, with his Asperger’s and his eczema, which is really bad.

When he gets stressed, his eczema gets a lot worse; he would be at risk from antibiotic-resistant skin infections. It’s not easy in a prison cell to keep everything clean.

The way they treat people who are a suicide risk in the US is not going to improve his condition. It’s not going to help his mental state. When he gets stressed, it all comes out in physical symptoms, so he will be ill all the time.

Lauri Love’s medical conditions are likely to be made worse through extradition to the US

Lauri should be facing trial in this country, where he has always lived, and where he is alleged to have been involved in hacking. His only chance of a fair trial will be before a jury of his peers.

In America, a jury is likely to view him as an enemy of the state, which is not conducive to a fair trial. Now the potential problems in prison look worse, with Trump in charge.

It would be a waste of his skills if Lauri were extradited.

Lauri Love’s appeal against extradition to the United States is due to be heard on Wednesday 29 and Thursday 30 November at the Royal Courts of Justice.

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